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Transcript
Biowaste Management in Vienna
2
Biowaste Management
Vienna may look back on a long tradition of
biogenic waste management and utilisation:
already in 1991, the separate collection of
this waste fraction was established compre­
hensively for the entirely municipal territory.
Right from the beginning, the main objective
of biowaste management in Vienna was not
the disposal of this type of waste but rather
the generation of high-quality compost. Today,
the City of Vienna operates a composting plant
for garden trimmings and similar as well as a
utility producing biogas from food scraps and
a biomass power plant. Compost is e.g. used as
a substitute for soil enrichment and to replace
chemical fertiliser. Instead of fossil energy
carriers, biomass and biogas serve to generate
high-quality, climate-neutral energy. Hence
Vienna’s organic recycling system contributes
significantly to environmental and climate
protection.
Collection of food waste
in a commercial kitchen
Biomass incineration
As a natural material, wood is suitable for the
direct generation of energy by incineration.
Since 2006, Wien Energie has been operating
the Vienna-Simmering biomass power plant in
co-operation with Österreichische Bundesfor­
ste AG (Austrian Federal Forest Authority). This
type of energy generation is clean and safe, as
biomass is available in the direct vicinity of the
plant and does not need to be imported like
fossil fuels.
The Vienna-Simmering biomass power plant
is fed by untreated wood biomass provided
by the Austrian Federal Forest Authority to an
extent of approx. 245,000 solid cubic metres
or 190,000 tonnes annually. This corresponds
to roughly 600,000 loose cubic metres with a
calorific value of approx. 9.8 MJ/kg. The plant
supplies around 48,000 Viennese households
with electricity and 12,000 households with
district heating and moreover helps to cut
down on fossil fuels to the amount of approx.
72,000 tonnes of coal, approx. 47,000 tonnes of
fuel oil or approx. 40,000 tonnes of natural gas.
Compared to a conventional thermal power
plant, the Vienna-Simmering biomass plant
helps to avoid approx. 144,000 tonnes of
carbon dioxide annually. Highly efficient co­
generation techniques make optimised use of
the input fuel, wood.
Biogas Wien plant for kitchen & food scraps
To minimise the risk of a transmission of
diseases such as BSE from animals to humans,
food scraps may not be fed to animals in Aus­
tria since 31 October 2006 (EU Food Hygiene
Regulation). Before that date, it was common
practice to feed food leftovers from canteen
kitchens to animals. To offer an alternative in
conformity with this statutory provision for
Vienna’s municipal territory, MA 48 took the
municipal Biogas Wien plant into operation in
September 2007 after only a short construction
Biowaste Management
phase and set up its own collection system
for food scraps from catering businesses
and canteen kitchens. At the same time, the
collection logistics of organic waste collection
bins (“green bins”) and the input material for
composting were optimised: the material from
green bins installed in the inner districts is also
utilised at the biogas plant, while the material
from the outer districts with their larger gar­
dens is composted.
COLLECTION
ENERGY USE
PROCESSING
Collection of kitchen scraps
The collection of kitchen scraps was conceived
for enterprises that regularly need to dispose
of larger quantities of food scraps, e.g. catering
businesses, hotels or trade outfits. In addition
to food scraps, other types of fermentable
waste are likewise collected, such as spoiled
foodstuffs including their packaging (e.g. tins)
or used cooking fat.
Four special collection vehicles as well as 2,200
hermetically sealable kitchen containers are
available to store this sort of wet and pulpy
waste. The special containers hold 120 litres
and are automatically cleaned every time after
emptying. If required, any remaining residues
can be removed manually. Moreover, it is also
possible to empty filled tanks by pumping.
Due to its high moisture content, the material
from the public green bins in the inner districts
DISTRIBUTION
Recycling of kitchen waste
FERMENTATION
REACTOR
3
4
Biowaste Management
is also optimally suited for anaerobic treatment
(fermentation) at the biogas plant. In con­
densed urban areas, approx. 4,000 public green
bins are installed on sidewalks and in parking
lanes. In this way, 9,000 tonnes of household
kitchen scraps are collected annually and trans­
ported to the biogas plant.
Biogas Wien ­
emptying of organic waste containers
Biogas Wien - gas storage
Energy generation from biogas
Every year, the biogas plant processes a total of
22,000 tonnes of kitchen scraps: about half of
this material originates in inner-city green bins;
the rest is collected from catering businesses,
hotels or food-producing factories. The biogas
plant employs a single-stage, mesophilic wet
process with a fermentation reactor temperature
of approx. 37 degrees centigrade. In the course
of treatment, microorganism activity results in
close to 2 million cubic metres of mixed gas.
This gas contains 40 to 70 percent methane and
is used to generate heat. The thermal energy
generated is fed directly into Vienna’s district
heating system and supplies 1,100 households in
the city. The extracted air, which equals approx.
25,000 cubic metres per hour, is transported to
an exhaust air purification unit.
Food scraps are utilised at the Biogas Wien
plant on the basis of the best available tech­
nology at the cutting edge of engineering and
eco-awareness: total encapsulation of emission
sources, exhaust air purification across the
entire plant by means of bio filters (operation
at zero odour emission), incineration of fermen­
tation residues and protection of groundwater
resources. Biogas Wien boasts excellent con­
nections to the transport and traffic network
and a high efficiency rate in excess of 80%.
BIOGAS WIEN
Operation start-up:
September 2007
Input:
22,000 tonnes/year of kitchen scraps
Output:
Kompostwerk Lobau – Sammlung und Be­
1.9 million cubic metres of gas
handlung von
8,500 megawatt hours of energy
Supplies 1,100 households with district
heating
Lobau composting plant – collection and treat­
ment of garden trimmings and garden waste
A key aspect of Vienna’s compost management
strategy lies in its integration into the local
recycling system. However, not all biodegrad­
able substances are collected separately. The
objective is the production of high-grade com­
post from suitable input materials, not waste
disposal. The cycle is fed exclusively with high­
quality residual plant matter: trimmings and
scraps from gardens, households and kitchens.
Bones, cooked and liquid food scraps as well
Biowaste Management
KREISLAUFWIRTSCHAFT
as residues from milk products are excluded
from the public collection of organic waste and
hence from composting.
Collection of garden waste and trimmings
Biogenic waste is collected from green bins and
skips located at Vienna’s 19 waste collection
centres as well as via green waste collection
(trees and shrubs). About 80,000 green bins
with their typical brown covers and brown
labels are installed across Vienna’s less densely
inhabited zones with numerous gardens, usual­
ly directly on the properties. During the vegeta­
tion phase, these containers are emptied every
week free of charge by 27 collection vehicles;
in the winter months, the vehicles pass every
other week. Every year, a total of approx. 60,000
tonnes of biogenic material are collected from
green bins; this is complemented by 30,000
tonnes originating from waste collection
centres and green waste collection. Only plant
matter is collected: tree and shrub cuttings,
leaves, lawn clippings, windfall fruit and plants.
Waste of animal origin such as meat products,
eggs, bones or food scraps are disposed of as
residual waste (in case of households) or as the
contents of specially designated kitchen
waste
Torffreie
Erde mit Kompost aus der
Wiener Biotonne.
bins (catering industry).
COLLECTION
GUTER GRUND
USE
PROCESSING
HIER ERDE
ZU KAUFEN
Zu kaufen auf allen Wiener Mistplätzen.
POTTING SOIL
PRODUCTION
Compost and soil from green bins
18 Liter | 40 Liter
Since 1991, biogenic waste is recycled by means
of open composting at the Lobau composting
Recycling of garden waste
COMPOSTING
5
6
Biowaste Management
plant. This plant has an approved annual
capacity of approx. 150,000 tonnes and produces
compost of the highest quality class “A+”
(according to the Compost Ordinance), which is
good enough to be used in organic farming.
The material collected is shredded and sieved
in the mechanical treatment unit, which also
removes all contaminations and metals. Then
it is mixed with pre-comminuted structural
material (wood) and moistened with water.
The thus treated raw compost fraction (approx.
100,000 tonnes) is spread across the compost­
ing surface in clamps (heaps). During the
entire rotting phase, the material is moved and
irrigated with compost turning machines. This
safeguards a level of aeration that is essential
for optimum processing while maintaining an
ideal moisture content. During the rotting peri­
od, the material to be composted is subjected
to several quality checks. After eight to ten
weeks, it is sufficiently mature, and 40,000 to
50,000 tonnes of compost can be sieved off for
subsequent utilisation.
Lobau composting plant
The Lobau composting plant is composed of
two absolutely waterproof and paved com­
posting surfaces of 2.6 hectares each. All runoff
and precipitation is collected in a system of
gutters and sewers. A reinforced-concrete un­
derground collector impermeable to water and
with a capacity of 1,300 cubic metres retains
Biowaste Management
the water, which is then discharged into the
sewer. In case of heavy precipitation, the rain­
water is stored in two rainwater reservoirs as
well as in an open and sealed retaining basin.
This prevents leakage of contaminated water
into the soil. All wastewater from the plant is
introduced into the public sewer system.
The compost clamps are not irrigated with
seepage water but exclusively with service
water from the plant’s own well. Thus the metal
salts dissolved in the seepage water cannot
contaminate the compost with heavy metals,
and the compost attains the highest quality
level, class “A+”.
In summer 2008, the company filling station of
the Lobau composting plant was changed over
to biodiesel. Thus all machinery and vehicles of
LOBAu COMpOStING pLANt
Operation start-up:
1991
Surface:
10 hectares
Input:
100,000 tonnes of garden waste
Output:
40,000 – 50,000 tonnes of compost
the plant now run on biodiesel manufactured
from used cooking oils collected by the City of
Vienna, which has considerably reduced carbon
dioxide emissions.
Compost quality seal
In 2002, MA 48 was awarded the Austrian
compost quality seal. This is a trademark pro­
tected under patent law in keeping with the
Austrian Quality Seal Ordinance and awarded
by Kompostgüteverband Österreich (Austrian
Compost Quality Society, KGVÖ). The quality
seal distinguishes high-quality products, whose
manufacturers work according to the principles
of ecological and sustainable waste recycling
and reutilisation.
weighing 18 or 40 litres at all waste collection
centres in Vienna. In addition to compost from
the green bins, this soil also contains nitrogen­
stabilised bark humus and thermally pressure­
impregnated wood fibres. This composition
ensures a loose and lightweight consistency.
Additional nutrients are exclusively introduced
by way of organic fertilisers; hence this soil
consists entirely of totally natural components.
Since 2011, the peat-free soil also corresponds
to the strict requirements of the Austrian Eco
Label, continuously checked by independent
experts.
Compost utilisation
The compost thus produced is available for
all citizens of Vienna free of charge. More
than 6,000 tonnes annually are picked up by
the population at the city’s waste collection
centres. After prior registration and payment of
the transport expense, the compost can also be
driven by lorry to allotment garden colonies or
private garden owners.
Since April 2009, part of the compost is also
transformed into the pre-mixed, peat-free soil
product “Guter Grund” in co-operation with a
private soil manufacturer, the terrasan compa­
ny in Vienna. The soil can be purchased in bags
Peat-free soil "Guter Grund" with compost from the
biowaste bin
7
8
Biowaste Management
15,000 to 20,000 tonnes of compost go to the
Vienna soil manufacturing plant of the terrasan
company as a base substrate for the production
and distribution of a wide variety of special soils.
A specific task of Vienna’s recycling system for
organic waste lies in supplying the city’s agri­
culture – above all its organic farmers – with
compost. In addition to private customers, key
clients include Municipal Department 49 of
the City of Vienna (MA 49 – Forestry Office and
Urban Agriculture), whose 1,000 hectares of
cultivated land make it one of Austria’s biggest
organic farmers, and Municipal Department 42
(MA 42 – Parks and Gardens).
positive aspects of organic waste recycling
and reutilisation
Organic waste management is much more than
just a waste management method. Positive
effects result for foodstuff production and the
protection of soil, groundwater and climate.
The long-term research projects on the applica­
tion of compost in organic farming co-financed
by the City of Vienna have entailed some truly
surprising findings:
Heat generation during composting by microbial degradation
Foodstuff production
For example, the yield of the different compost
varieties was by 7 to 10% higher on an average
across 14 study years than that of the unferti­
lised zero option. Moreover, organic farming
Biowaste Management
comes with a high guaranteed yield. The qual­
ity of the harvested produce was mostly very
high as well. Potatoes fertilised with compost
presented a markedly lower nitrate content
than those fertilised with chemical substances.
In addition, the heavy metal content of some
agricultural produce (oats, spelt, potatoes) was
analysed as well. The copper and nickel content
measured in oats and the cadmium content of
potatoes treated with chemical fertiliser were
significantly higher than with compost fertili­
sation.
Soil protection and enrichment
Contrary to chemical fertilisers, compost fer­
tilisation improves the humus content of the
soil, which strengthens its fertility, structure
and water retention capacity as well as soil life.
In turn, this benefits not only the quality of the
harvested produce but also plant health, as
the reduced mildew infestation of crops grown
on compost-fertilised lots shows. The tests
also demonstrated that the use of quality class
“A+” compost in quantities recommended for
organic farming does not harbour any danger
of heavy metal accumulating in the soil.
Groundwater protection
Intensive conventional agriculture contributes
significantly to increasing the nitrate content of
groundwater resources. Organic farming (with
compost fertilisation) completely avoids this
9
10
Biowaste Management
emission into groundwater. The nutrient de­
posit contained in compost can be optimally
used by plants; as a result, no surplus of
mineral nitrogen compounds (“nitrates”) will
leak into the groundwater.
The findings of the studies conducted since
1996 have shown that long-term fertilisation
with compost at the Lobau site has not resulted
in any increase of nitrogen loads and other
nutrients in the groundwater. The maximum
values measured for nitrate in the soil were
higher for mineral (chemical) fertilisers than for
the lots fertilised with compost.
Lobau composting plant
Climate protection
The use of compost also contributes markedly
to reducing climate-relevant gas emissions.
Compared to conventional agriculture, organic
farming (with compost fertilisation) allows to
decrease this volume by up to 3.4 tonnes of
CO2 equivalent/hectare per year: the use of
compost as a fertiliser and soil improver leads
to the formation of “carbon sinks”, which in its
turn entails long-term fixation of carbon in
the soil and a reduction of CO2 emissions. The
substitution of chemical fertilisers and pesti­
cides with compost has likewise positive effects
on climate protection. Moreover, the emission
of nitrous oxide is by 85% lower for organic
farming (using compost as a fertiliser) than in
conventional agriculture.
Biowaste Management
Compost trial field
11
Contact: City of Vienna
Municipal Department 48 Waste Management,
Street Cleaning and
Vehicle Fleet
Head of Department:
Josef Thon
Einsiedlergasse 2, 1050 Vienna
Phone: (+ 43 1) 588 17 - 0
Fax: (+ 43 1) 588 17 - 99 - 480037
E-mail: [email protected]
www.abfall.wien.at
www.facebook.com/die48er
Publisher: City of Vienna - Municipal Department 48 - Waste Management, Street Cleaning and Vehicle Fleet.
Responsible for the content: Josef Thon, Einsiedlergasse 2, 1050 Vienna. August 2013. Printed on environmentally
friendly paper from the „ÖkoKauf Wien“ sample folder. Photo copyrights: MA 48, F. Matern, mediawien.
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